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{{other people|Muhammad Iqbal}}
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{{EngvarB|date=November 2015}}
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{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2015}}
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{{Infobox philosopher
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| honorific_prefix =[[Allamah|Allama]]
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| name            = Muhammad Iqbal<br />{{lang|ur|{{Nastaliq|محمد اِقبال}}}}
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| honorific_suffix =
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| image            =  Iqbal.jpg
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| image_size      = 200
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| alt              =
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| caption          = Allama  Muhammad Iqbal
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| birth_name      = Muhammad Iqbal
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| birth_date      = {{Birth date|df=yes|1877|11|9}}
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| birth_place      = [[Sialkot]], [[Punjab Province (British India)|Punjab Province, British India]],<br/> (now in [[Punjab, Pakistan]])
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| death_date      = {{Death date and age|df=yes|1938|4|21|1877|11|9}}
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| death_place      = [[Lahore]], [[Punjab]], [[Presidencies and provinces of British India|British India]]<br/> (now in [[Punjab, Pakistan]])
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| deathcause      = [[Heart Disease]]
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| residence        =
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| nationality      = [[British subject]]
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| spouse          =
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| alma_mater      = [[Scotch Mission College]]<small> ([[Faculty of Arts|F.A.]])</small><br />[[Government College University (Lahore)|Government College]] <small>([[B.A.]], [[M.A.]])</small><br />[[University of Cambridge]] <small>([[B.A.]])</small><br />[[University of Munich]] <small>([[Ph.D.]])</small>
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| notable_works    =  ''[[The Secrets of the Self]]'', ''[[The Secrets of Selflessness]]'', ''[[Message from the East]]'', ''[[Persian Psalms]]'', ''[[Javid Nama]]'', ''[[Sare Jahan se Accha]]'' ([[#Literary work|more works]])
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| awards          =
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| signature        =
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| signature_alt    =
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| era              = [[20th-century philosophy]]
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| region          = [[Muslim world]]
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| school_tradition = [[Islamic philosophy]]
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| institutions    =
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| main_interests  = [[Islam]], [[Urdu poetry]], [[Persian poetry]], [[Law]]
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| notable_ideas    = [[Allahabad Address]]
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| influences      = [[Mir Sayyid Ali Hamadani]], [[Syed Mir Hassan]], [[Rumi]], [[Johann Wolfgang von Goethe]], [[Friedrich Nietzsche]], [[Henri Bergson]], [[Thomas Walker Arnold]]
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| influenced      = [[Muhammad Ali Jinnah]], [[Pakistan Movement]], [[Islamic Republic of Pakistan]], [[Ale Ahmed Suroor]], [[Ali Shariati]], [[Fateh Muhammad Malik]]
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}}
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'''Muhammad Iqbal''' ({{lang-ur|{{Nastaliq|محمد اِقبال}}}}) (November 9, 1877 – April 21, 1938),  widely known as '''Allama Iqbal''', was a poet, philosopher, and politician, as well as an academic, barrister and scholar<ref>{{cite book|title=Islamic State Practices, International Law and the Threat from Terrorism: A Critique of the 'Clash of Civilizations' in the New World Order|url=https://books.google.com/?id=es9Sunv_y2MC&pg=PA15&dq=Iqbal+a+muslim+scholar#v=onepage&q=Iqbal%20a%20muslim%20scholar&f=false|work=Bloomsbury Publishingr|first1=Javaid|last1=Rehman|page=15|year=2005|isbn=9781841135014}}</ref><ref name="aml.org.pk" /> in [[British Raj|British India]] who is widely regarded as having inspired the [[Pakistan Movement]]. He is called the "Spiritual Father of [[Pakistan]]."<ref>{{cite book|last1=al.]|first1=Albert M. Craig ... [et|title=The heritage of world civilizations.|date=2011|publisher=Pearson Education|location=Harlow|isbn=978-0-205-80347-7|pages=800|edition=9th}}</ref> He is considered one of the most important figures in [[Urdu literature]],<ref name="goethezeitportal">{{cite web|author=Anil Bhatti |work=Yearbook of the Goethe Society of India |url=http://www.goethezeitportal.de/fileadmin/PDF/db/wiss/goethe/bhatti_iqbal.pdf |title=Iqbal and Goethe |format=PDF |accessdate=7 January 2011 |deadurl=unfit |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20081030083304/http://www.goethezeitportal.de/fileadmin/PDF/db/wiss/goethe/bhatti_iqbal.pdf |archivedate=30 October 2008 }}</ref> with literary work in both [[Urdu]] and [[Persian language|Persian]].<ref name="aml.org.pk">{{cite web|url=http://www.aml.org.pk/AllamaIqbal.html |title=Allama Muhammad Iqbal Philosopher, poet, and Political leader |publisher=Aml.Org.pk |accessdate=2 March 2012 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120305000639/http://www.aml.org.pk/AllamaIqbal.html |archivedate=5 March 2012 |df= }}</ref><ref name="goethezeitportal" />
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Iqbal is admired as a prominent poet by [[Indian people|Indians]], [[Pakistanis]], [[Iran]]ians and other international scholars of literature.<ref name="thefriday" /><ref name="dailytimes.co.pk">{{cite web|url=http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_28-5-2003_pg3_6 |title=Leading News Resource of Pakistan |publisher=Daily Times |date=28 May 2003 |accessdate=7 January 2011 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20050506190825/http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_28-5-2003_pg3_6 |archivedate=6 May 2005 }}</ref><ref name="Iqbal Academy Pakistan" /> Though Iqbal is best known as an eminent poet, he is also a highly acclaimed "Muslim philosophical thinker of modern times".<ref name="aml.org.pk" /><ref name="Iqbal Academy Pakistan" /> His first poetry book, ''[[The Secrets of the Self]]'', appeared in the Persian language in 1915, and other books of poetry include ''[[The Secrets of Selflessness]]'', ''[[Message from the East]]'' and ''[[Persian Psalms]]''. Amongst these, his best known Urdu works are ''[[The Call of the Marching Bell]]'', ''[[Gabriel's Wing]]'', ''[[The Rod of Moses]]'' and a part of ''[[Gift from Hijaz]]''.<ref name="allamaiqbal.com">{{cite web |last=1 in author list|first=Iqbal Academy |date=26 May 2006|url=http://www.allamaiqbal.com/person/biography/biotxtread.html |title=Allama Iqbal – Biography |format=PHP |accessdate=7 January 2011}}</ref> Along with his Urdu and Persian poetry, his Urdu and English lectures and letters have been very influential in cultural, social, religious and political disputes.<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
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In 1923, he was [[Orders, decorations, and medals of the United Kingdom#Knighthood|knighted]] by [[George V|King George V]],<ref>{{London Gazette | issue = 32782 | date = 29 December 1922 |page=2 |supp=y | city = London }}</ref> granting him the title "Sir".<ref name="groundreport.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.groundreport.com/Media_and_Tech/Dr-Sir-Mohammad-Iqbal-s-pro-Kashmir-approach-highl_2/2906057 |title=Iqbal's pro Kashmir approach|publisher=GroundReport.com|date=19 August 2009|accessdate=24 January 2012}}</ref> While studying law and philosophy in England, Iqbal became a member of the London branch of the [[All-India Muslim League]].<ref name="Iqbal Academy Pakistan" /><ref name="allamaiqbal.com" /> Later, during the League's December 1930 session, he delivered his most famous presidential speech known as the [[Allahabad Address]] in which he pushed for the creation of a Muslim state in northwest India.<ref name="Iqbal Academy Pakistan" /><ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
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In much of South Asia and the Urdu-speaking world, Iqbal is regarded as the ''Shair-e-Mashriq'' ({{lang-ur|{{nq|شاعر مشرق}}}}, "Poet of the East").<ref name="Abida">{{cite book|title=Encyclopaedic dictionary of Urdu literature (2 Vols. Set)|url=https://books.google.com/?id=-otQriwQ9z4C|page=304|first=Abida|last=Samiuddin|publisher=Global Vision Publishing House|year=2007|isbn=81-8220-191-8}}</ref><ref name="pktoday73">{{cite news|title=Allama Iqbal's 73rd death anniversary observed with reverence|url=http://www.pakistantoday.com.pk/2011/04/allama-iqbal%E2%80%99s-73rd-death-anniversary-observed-with-reverence/|first=Imran|last=Sharif|work=[[Pakistan Today]]|date=21 April 2011|accessdate=6 August 2012}}</ref><ref name="dailytimes" /> He is also called ''Mufakkir-e-Pakistan'' ({{lang-ur|{{nq|مفکر پاکستان}}}}, "The Thinker of Pakistan"), ''Musawar-e-Pakistan'' ({{lang-ur|{{nq|مصور پاکستان}}}}, "Artist of Pakistan") and ''Hakeem-ul-Ummat'' ({{lang-ur|{{nq|حکیم الامت}}}}, "The Sage of the [[Ummah]]"). The Pakistan government officially named him  "[[National Poet]] of Pakistan".<ref name="Iqbal Academy Pakistan" /> His birthday ''Yōm-e Welādat-e Muḥammad Iqbāl'' ({{lang-ur|{{nq|یوم ولادت محمد اقبال}}}}), or [[Iqbal Day]], is a [[public holidays in Pakistan|public holiday in Pakistan]].<ref name="brecorder.com">{{cite web|title=National holiday November 9|url=http://www.brecorder.com/top-stories/single/595/0/1121782/|publisher=Brecorder.com|date=6 November 2010|accessdate=7 August 2012}}</ref>
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Iqbal's house is still located in [[Sialkot]] and is recognized as Iqbal's Manzil and is open for visitors. His other house where he lived most of his life and died is in Lahore, named as Javed Manzil.( "Javed Manzil". ualberta.ca. Retrieved 24 July 2014.) The museum is located on Allama Iqbal Road near Lahore Railway Station, Punjab, Pakistan.<ref name="Wikipedia">[[Javed Manzil]]</ref>{{Better source|reason=per WP:CIRCULAR|date=February 2018}} It was protected under the Punjab Antiquities Act of 1975, and declared a Pakistani national monument in 1977.<ref name="Wikipedia"/>{{better source needed|date=January 2018}}
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== Personal life ==
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=== Background ===
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Iqbal was born on 9 November 1877 in a ethnic Kashmiri family in Gujrat within the [[Punjab Province (British India)|Punjab Province of British India]] (now in Pakistan).<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.iqbal.com.pk/iqbal/life-of-iqbal|title=Life of Allama Iqbal|last=Mushtaq|first=Faraz|work=International Iqbal Society (Formerly DISNA)|access-date=2018-03-28|language=en-gb}}</ref>  His grandfather's name was Sheikh Mohammad Rafique. His ancestors were Kashmiri Brahmans of the Sapro clan and had converted to Islam around 200 years ago in the time of Bud Shah. The first ancestor to convert to Islam has been identified as Haji Lol a Sufi mystic so named because of his love for Haj<ref>Iqbal's biography Zinda Rud by Javeed Iqbal page 22-23.</ref> In the 19th century, when the [[Sikh Empire]] was conquering Kashmir, his grandfather's family [[Kashmiris of Punjab|migrated to Punjab]]. Iqbal often mentioned and commemorated his Kashmiri lineage in his writings.<ref name=":5">{{cite book|last=Sevea|first=Iqbal Singh|title=The Political Philosophy of Muhammad Iqbal: Islam and Nationalism in Late Colonial India|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Fk8hAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA16|year=2012|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-1-139-53639-4|page=16}}</ref><ref name="pktoday73" />
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[[File:Iqbal and son Javid in 1930.jpg|thumb|Allama Iqbal with his son [[Javed Iqbal (judge)|Javed Iqbal]] in 1930]]
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[[File:Mother of Iqbal.jpg|thumb|left|Iqbal's mother, who died on 9 November 1914. Iqbal expressed his feeling of [[pathos]] in a poetic form after her death.]]
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Iqbal's father, Sheikh Noor Muhammad (died 1930), was a tailor, not formally educated but a religious man.<ref name="books.google.co.uk">{{cite book|title=Gabriel's wing: a study into the religious ideas of Sir Muhammad Iqbal|url=https://books.google.com/?id=goE3AAAAIAAJ|first=Annemarie|last=Schimmel|publisher=Brill Archive|year=1962|pages=34–45}}</ref><ref name="Mustansir Mir">{{cite book|title=Iqbal|first=Mustansir|last=Mir|publisher=I.B. Tauris|year=2006|isbn=1-84511-094-3}}</ref> Iqbal's mother Imam Bibi, a Punjabi Muslim from Sialkot, was described as a polite and humble woman who helped the poor and her neighbours with their problems. She died on 9 November 1914 in Sialkot.<ref name="Jai Narain Sharma">{{cite book|title=Encyclopædia of eminent thinkers, volume 17|url=https://books.google.com/?id=sKMK9WY9OOsC|first=Jai Narain|last=Sharma|publisher=Concept Publishing Company|page=14|isbn=978-81-7022-684-0|year=2008}}</ref><ref name="allamaiqbal a person">{{cite web|title=Iqbal in years|url=http://www.allamaiqbal.com/person/years/years.htm|format=PHP|accessdate=6 August 2012}}</ref> Iqbal loved his mother, and on her death he expressed his feelings of pathos in a poetic form [[elegy]].<ref name="books.google.co.uk" />
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{{blockquote|Who would wait for me anxiously in my native place?<br />
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Who would display restlessness if my letter fails to arrive? <br />
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I will visit thy grave with this complaint:<br />
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Who will now think of me in midnight prayers?<br />
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All thy life thy love served me with devotion—<br />
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When I became fit to serve thee, thou hast departed.<ref name="books.google.co.uk" />}}
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===Early education===
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Iqbal was four years old when he was admitted to the [[mosque]] to learn the [[Qur'an]]. He learned the Arabic language from his teacher, [[Syed Mir Hassan]], the head of the [[madrasa]] and professor of [[Arabic]] at [[Murray College|Scotch Mission College]] in Sialkot, where he [[matriculation|matriculated]] in 1893.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.iqbal.com.pk/iqbal/time-line|title=Time line|last=Mushtaq|first=Faraz|work=International Iqbal Society (Formerly DISNA)|access-date=2018-03-28|language=en-gb}}</ref> He received [[Intermediate 2|Intermediate]] with the Faculty of Arts diploma in 1895.<ref name="pktoday73" /><ref name="allamaiqbal a person" /><ref name="Taneja and Taneja">{{cite book|title=Educational thinkers|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=O6Fp2zaQVVMC&pg=PA151|work=Atlantic Publisher|first1=V.R|last1=Taneja|first2=S.|last2=Taneja|page=151|isbn= 81-7156-112-8|year=2004}}</ref> The same year he enrolled at [[Government College University (Lahore)|Government College University]], where he obtained his Bachelor of Arts in philosophy, [[English literature]] and Arabic in 1897, and won the Khan Bahadurddin F.S. Jalaluddin medal as he performed well in Arabic.<ref name="allamaiqbal a person" /> In 1899, he received his [[Master of Arts]] degree from the same college and had the first place in [[University of the Punjab]].<ref name="pktoday73" /><ref name="allamaiqbal a person" /><ref name="Taneja and Taneja" />
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===Marriages===
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Iqbal married three times. His first marriage was held in 1895, when he was 18 years old, shortly after he had completed his [[Intermediate 2|Intermediate]] and enrolled at Government College, Lahore. The bride, Karim Bibi, was the daughter of physician Khan Bahadur Ata Muhammad Khan. Her sister was the mother of director and music composer [[Khwaja Khurshid Anwar]].<ref>Muḥammad Saʻīd, ''Lahore: A Memoir'', Vanguard Books (1989), p. 175</ref><ref>Harjap Singh Aujla, [http://www.apnaorg.com/articles/aujla-7/ Khurshid Anwar, a prince among the music directors of the sub-continent and his exploits in British and Independent India], Khurshid Anwar Biography, Academy of the Punjab in North America website, Retrieved 29 September 2015</ref> The match was arranged by their families in the usual Indian manner, and the couple were blessed with two children, a daughter Miraj Begum and a son, Aftab Iqbal. Later Iqbal married Sardar Begum, and they became the parents of a son, [[Javed Iqbal (judge)|Javed Iqbal]], who was to become a judge. Iqbal's third marriage was with Mukhtar Begum and it was held in December 1914, shortly after the death of Iqbal's mother in November the same year.<ref name="Abida" /><ref name="allamaiqbal a person" />
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=== Higher education in Europe ===
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Iqbal was influenced by the teachings of [[Thomas Walker Arnold|Sir Thomas Arnold]], his philosophy teacher at Government college Lahore. Arnold's teachings determined Iqbal to pursue higher education in the West, and in 1905, he travelled to England for that purpose. Iqbal qualified for a scholarship from [[Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity College, University of Cambridge]] and obtained Bachelor of Arts in 1906, and in the same year he was [[called to the bar]] as a [[barrister]] from [[Lincoln's Inn]]. In 1907, Iqbal moved to Germany to pursue his doctoral studies, and earned a Doctor of Philosophy degree from the [[Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich]] in 1908. Working under the guidance of [[Fritz Hommel|Friedrich Hommel]], Iqbal's [[doctoral thesis]] entitled ''[[The Development of Metaphysics in Persia]]'' was published.<ref name="pktoday73" /><ref name="phdthesis">{{cite web|title=The development of metaphysics in persia|url=http://www.h-net.msu.edu/~bahai/diglib/books/F-J/I/Iqbal/metaphys/iqbfn.pdf|work=London Luzac and Company|first1=East|last1=Lansing|first2=Mi.|last2=H-Bahai|origyear=1908|year=2001|accessdate=1 May 2012}}</ref><ref name="Mustansir Mir2">{{cite book|title=Tulip in the desert: A selection of the poetry of Muhammad Iqbal|url=https://books.google.com/?id=Okxr1alsVqIC|work=c.Hurts and Company, Publishers Ltd|location=London|first=Mustansir|last=Mir|page=2|isbn=978-967-5-06267-4|year=1990}}</ref><ref name="Roy Jackson">{{cite book|title=Fifty key figures in Islam|url=https://books.google.com/?id=w6flsOIT5PsC|work=Routledge|first=Roy|last=Jackso|page=181|isbn=978-0-415-35467-7|year=2006}}</ref>
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During Iqbal's stay in [[Heidelberg]] in 1907 his German professor Emma Wegenast taught him about [[Goethe]]'s ''[[Goethe's Faust|Faust]]'', [[Heinrich Heine|Heine]] and [[Nietzsche]].<ref name="A Spiritual Bridge between East and West"/> During his study in Europe, Iqbal began to write poetry in Persian. He prioritised it because he believed he had found an easy way to express his thoughts. He would write continuously in Persian throughout his life.<ref name="pktoday73" />
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Iqbal had a great interest in Islamic studies, especially Sufi beliefs. Much of it can be evident from his poetry, in which apart from the independence ideologies he also explores concepts of submission to Allah and following the path of Prophet Muhammad.
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=== Academic career ===
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[[File:Iqbal Youth.jpg|thumb|Photograph taken during Allama Iqbal's youth in 1899]]
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Iqbal, after completing his Master of Arts degree in 1899, began his career as a reader of Arabic at [[Oriental College, Lahore|Oriental College]] and shortly afterwards was selected as a junior professor of philosophy at Government College Lahore, where he had also been a student in the past. He worked there until he left for England in 1905. In 1908, he returned from England and joined the same college again as a professor of philosophy and English literature.<ref name="Brill">{{cite book|title=Gabriel's wing|url=https://books.google.com/?id=goE3AAAAIAAJ|first=Annemarie|last=Schimmel|publisher=Brill Archive|page=39|year=1963}}</ref> In the same period Iqbal began practising law at Chief Court Lahore, but he soon quit law practice and devoted himself in literary works,  becoming an active member of ''[[Anjuman-e-Himayat-e-Islam]]''.<ref name="allamaiqbal a person" /> In 1919, he became the general secretary of the same organisation. Iqbal's thoughts in his work primarily focus on the spiritual direction and development of human society, centred around experiences from his travels and stays in Western Europe and the Middle East. He was profoundly influenced by Western philosophers such as [[Friedrich Nietzsche]], [[Henri Bergson]] and Goethe.<ref name="books.google.co.uk" /><ref name="A Spiritual Bridge between East and West">{{cite web|title=Muhammad Iqbal|url=http://en.qantara.de/webcom/show_article.php/_c-478/_nr-1044/i.html|first=Stephan|last=Popp|date=6 May 2010|accessdate=6 August 2012}}</ref>
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The poetry and philosophy of [[Mawlana Rumi]] bore the deepest influence on Iqbal's mind. Deeply grounded in religion since childhood, Iqbal began concentrating intensely on the study of Islam, the culture and history of Islamic civilisation and its political future, while embracing Rumi as "his guide".<ref name="books.google.co.uk" /> Iqbal would feature Rumi in the role of guide in many of his poems. Iqbal's works focus on reminding his readers of the past glories of Islamic civilisation, and delivering the message of a pure, spiritual focus on Islam as a source for socio-political liberation and greatness. Iqbal denounced political divisions within and amongst Muslim nations, and frequently alluded to and spoke in terms of the global Muslim community or the [[Ummah]].<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" /><ref name="books.google.co.uk" />
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Iqbal's poetry has been translated into many European languages, at the time when his work was famous during the early part of the 20th century.<ref name="Iqbal Academy Pakistan" /> Iqbal's Asrar-i-Khudi and [[Javed Nama]] were translated into English by [[Reynold A. Nicholson|R. A. Nicholson]] and [[Arthur John Arberry|A. J. Arberry]] respectively.<ref name="Iqbal Academy Pakistan" /><ref name="dailytimes">{{cite news|title=Cam Diary: Oxford remembers the Cam man |url=http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_28-5-2003_pg3_6 |work=Daily Times |date=28 May 2003 |accessdate=9 November 2010 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20050506190825/http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_28-5-2003_pg3_6 |archivedate=6 May 2005 |df= }}</ref>
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=== Career as a Lawyer ===
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Iqbal was not only a prolific writer but was also a known Advocate. He used to appear before the Lahore High Court in both civil and criminal matters. There are more than 100 reported judgments to his name.
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=== Final years and death ===
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[[File:Allama Iqbals Tomb East & south walls July 1 2005.jpg|thumb|left|The [[tomb of Muhammad Iqbal]] at the entrance of the Badshahi Mosque in [[Lahore]]]]
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In 1933, after returning from a trip to Spain and Afghanistan, Iqbal suffered from a mysterious throat illness.<ref>{{cite book|last=Schimmel|first=Annemarie|title=Gabriel's Wing|publisher=Brill Archive|year=1962|page=55|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=goE3AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA153&dq=Muhammad+Iqbal+illness#PPA55,M1}}</ref> He spent his final years helping [[Chaudhry Niaz Ali Khan]] to establish the Dar ul Islam Trust Institute at Jamalpur estate near [[Pathankot]],<ref>Azam, K.M., ''Hayat-e-Sadeed: Bani-e-Dar ul Islam Chaudhry Niaz Ali (A Righteous Life: Founder of Dar ul Islam Chaudhry Niaz Ali Khan)'', Lahore: Nashriyat, 2010 (583 pp., Urdu) {{ISBN|978-969-8983-58-1}}</ref><ref>[http://www.pakistantoday.com.pk/2011/04/allama-iqbal%E2%80%99s-73rd-death-anniversary-observed-with-reverence/ Allama Iqbal’s 73rd death anniversary observed with reverence]. ''Pakistan Today''. Retrieved 30 October 2011.</ref> where there were plans to subsidise studies in classical Islam and contemporary social science. He also advocated for an independent Muslim state.[[File:Pic iqbal 001.gif|thumb|1500px|Iqbal as a Barrister-at-Law]] Iqbal ceased practising law in 1934 and was granted a pension by the [[Nawab of Bhopal]]. In his final years, he frequently visited the [[Dargah]] of famous [[Sufi]] [[Ali Hujwiri]] in [[Lahore]] for spiritual guidance. After suffering for months from his illness, Iqbal died in Lahore on 21 April 1938.<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" /><ref name="pktoday73" /> [[Tomb of Muhammad Iqbal|His tomb]] is located in [[Hazuri Bagh]], the enclosed garden between the entrance of the [[Badshahi Mosque]] and the [[Lahore Fort]], and official guards are provided by the [[Government of Pakistan]].
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[[File:AllamaIqbal Tomb Night.jpg|thumb|left|A night view of the tomb]]
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Iqbal is commemorated widely in Pakistan, where he is regarded as the ideological founder of the state. His ''[[Tarana-e-Hind]]'' is a song that is widely used in India as a patriotic song speaking of communal harmony. His birthday is annually commemorated in Pakistan as [[Iqbal Day]]. Iqbal is the [[namesake]] of many public institutions, including the Allama Iqbal Campus Punjab University in Lahore, the [[Allama Iqbal Medical College]] in Lahore, [[Iqbal Stadium]] in [[Faisalabad]], [[Allama Iqbal Open University]] in Pakistan, Iqbal Memorial Institute in Srinagar, the [[Allama Iqbal International Airport]] in Lahore, Iqbal Hostel in [[Government College University, Lahore]], the Allama Iqbal hall in [[Nishtar Medical College]] in [[Multan]], [[Gulshan-e-Iqbal Town]] in Karachi,  Allama Iqbal Town in Lahore, and Allama Iqbal Hall at [[Aligarh Muslim University]].
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The government and public organisations have sponsored the establishment of educational institutions, colleges and schools dedicated to Iqbal, and have established the [[Iqbal Academy Pakistan]] to research, teach and preserve his works, literature and philosophy. Allama Iqbal Stamps Society was established for the promotion of Iqbaliyat in [[philately]] and in other hobbies. His son [[Javid Iqbal (judge)|Javid Iqbal]] has served as a justice of the [[Supreme Court of Pakistan]]. Javaid Manzil was Iqbal's last residence.<ref>[http://www.ilmkidunya.com/student_articles/javaid-manzil-last-residence-of-allama-iqbal-looking-for-visitors.aspx Javaid Manzil last residence of Allama Iqbal looking for visitors By: M Abid Ayub]. Ilmkidunya.com. Retrieved 30 October 2011.</ref>
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== Efforts and influences ==
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=== Political ===
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{{further|Pakistan Movement}}
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As Iqbal was interested in the national affairs since his youth and he had got considerable recognition after his return in 1908 from [[England]] by Punjabi elite, he was closely associated with [[Muhammad Shafi (politician)|Mian Muhammad Shafi]]. So when [[All-India Muslim League]] was expanded to provincial level and Mian Mohammad Shafi got major role to play in the structural organization of Provincial League, Iqbal was made one of the three first joint secretaries of the [[Punjab Muslim League]] with Shaikh Abdul Aziz and Maulvi Mahbub Alam.<ref>{{Cite book|title=A History of the All-India Muslim League (1906–1947)|last=Afzal|first=Rafique M.|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2013|isbn=978-0-19-906735-0|location=Karachi, Pakistan|pages=15}}</ref> While dividing his time between law practice and poetry, Iqbal had remained active in the Muslim League. He did not support Indian involvement in [[World War I]] and remained in close touch with Muslim political leaders such as [[Mohammad Ali Jouhar]] and [[Muhammad Ali Jinnah]]. He was a critic of the mainstream [[Indian National Congress]], which he regarded as dominated by [[Hindus]], and was disappointed with the League when during the 1920s, it was absorbed in factional divides between the pro-British group led by [[Sir Muhammad Shafi]] and the centrist group led by Jinnah.<ref name="brightpk.com" />{{unreliable source?|date=May 2012}}
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[[File:Iqbalpolitics.jpg|thumb|250px|Iqbal with Muslim politicians.<br />
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(L to R): M. Iqbal (third), [[Syed Zafarul Hasan]] (sixth) at [[Aligarh Muslim University]]]]
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In November 1926, with the encouragement of friends and supporters, Iqbal contested the election for a seat in the [[Punjab Legislative Assembly]] from the Muslim district of Lahore, and defeated his opponent by a margin of 3,177 votes.<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" /> He supported the [[Fourteen Points of Jinnah|constitutional proposals]] presented by Jinnah with the aim of guaranteeing Muslim political rights and influence in a coalition with the Congress, and worked with the [[Aga Khan]] and other Muslim leaders to mend the factional divisions and achieve unity in the Muslim League.<ref name="brightpk.com" />{{unreliable source?|date=May 2012}} While in Lahore he was a friend of [[Abdul Sattar Ranjoor]].<ref name="n">''New Age Weekly''. ''[http://www.newageweekly.com/2013/04/in-memory-of-com-ranjoor.html In Memory of Com Ranjoor]''</ref>
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=== Iqbal, Jinnah and concept of Pakistan ===
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Ideologically separated from Congress Muslim leaders, Iqbal had also been disillusioned with the politicians of the Muslim League owing to the factional conflict that plagued the League in the 1920s. Discontent with factional leaders like Muhammad Shafi and Fazl-ur-Rahman, Iqbal came to believe that only Jinnah was a political leader capable of preserving unity and fulfilling the League's objectives of Muslim political empowerment. Building a strong, personal correspondence with Jinnah, Iqbal was an influential force in convincing Jinnah to end his self-imposed exile in London, return to India and take charge of the League. Iqbal firmly believed that Jinnah was the only leader capable of drawing Indian Muslims to the League and maintaining party unity before the British and the Congress:
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{{quote|I know you are a busy man but I do hope you won't mind my writing to you often, as you are the only Muslim in India today to whom the community has right to look up for safe guidance through the storm which is coming to North-West India and, perhaps, to the whole of India.<ref name="igbalandpakmovement" />
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}}
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While Iqbal espoused the idea of Muslim-majority provinces in 1930, Jinnah would continue to hold talks with the Congress through the decade and only officially embraced the goal of Pakistan in 1940. Some historians postulate that Jinnah always remained hopeful for an agreement with the Congress and never fully desired the partition of India.<ref name="jalal14">Ayesha Jalal, ''The Sole Spokesman'', pp. 14</ref> Iqbal's close correspondence with Jinnah is speculated by some historians as having been responsible for Jinnah's embrace of the idea of Pakistan. Iqbal elucidated to Jinnah his vision of a separate Muslim state in a letter sent on 21 June 1937:
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[[File:Iqbal Allahabad.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Allama Iqbal in Allahabad with other Muslim leaders]]
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{{quote|A separate federation of Muslim Provinces, reformed on the lines I have suggested above, is the only course by which we can secure a peaceful India and save Muslims from the domination of Non-Muslims. Why should not the Muslims of North-West India and [[Bengal]] be considered as nations entitled to self-determination just as other nations in India and outside India are.<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />}} Iqbal, serving as president of the Punjab Muslim League, criticised Jinnah's political actions, including a political agreement with Punjabi leader [[Sir Sikandar Hyat Khan]], whom Iqbal saw as a representative of feudal classes and not committed to Islam as the core political philosophy. Nevertheless, Iqbal worked constantly to encourage Muslim leaders and masses to support Jinnah and the League. Speaking about the political future of Muslims in India, Iqbal said:
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{{quote|There is only one way out. Muslims should strengthen Jinnah's hands. They should join the Muslim League. Indian question, as is now being solved, can be countered by our united front against both the Hindus and the English. Without it, our demands are not going to be accepted. People say our demands smack of communalism. This is sheer propaganda. These demands relate to the defense of our national existence.... The united front can be formed under the leadership of the Muslim League. And the Muslim League can succeed only on account of Jinnah. Now none but Jinnah is capable of leading the Muslims.<ref name="igbalandpakmovement">{{cite web|url=http://www.allamaiqbal.com/person/movement/move_main.htm |title=Iqbal and Pakistan Movement |publisher=Allamaiqbal.com |date= |accessdate=9 November 2010}}</ref>
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}}
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== Revival of Islamic polity ==
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[[File:Iqbal-RahmatAli.jpg|thumb|left|Iqbal with [[Choudhary Rahmat Ali]] and other Muslim leaders]]
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Iqbal's six English lectures were published in Lahore in 1930, and then by the [[Oxford University Press]] in 1934 in a book titled [[The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam]]. The lectures had been delivered at [[Madras]], [[Hyderabad, India|Hyderabad]] and [[Aligarh]].<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" /> These lectures dwell on the role of Islam as a religion as well as a political and legal philosophy in the modern age.<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" /> In these lectures Iqbal firmly rejects the political attitudes and conduct of Muslim politicians, whom he saw as morally misguided, attached to power and without any standing with the Muslim masses.
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Iqbal expressed fears that not only would secularism weaken the spiritual foundations of Islam and Muslim society, but that India's [[Hindu]]-majority population would crowd out Muslim heritage, culture and political influence. In his travels to [[Egypt]], [[Afghanistan]], [[Iran]] and [[Turkey]], he promoted ideas of greater Islamic political co-operation and unity, calling for the shedding of nationalist differences.<ref name="books.google.co.uk" /> He also speculated on different political arrangements to guarantee Muslim political power; in a dialogue with Dr. [[B. R. Ambedkar]], Iqbal expressed his desire to see Indian provinces as autonomous units under the direct control of the British government and with no central Indian government. He envisaged autonomous Muslim provinces in India. Under a single Indian union he feared for Muslims, who would suffer in many respects especially with regard to their existentially separate entity as Muslims.<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
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Iqbal was elected president of the Muslim League in 1930 at its session in [[Allahabad]] in the [[United Provinces of Agra and Oudh|United Provinces]], as well as for the session in Lahore in 1932. In his [[Allahabad Address|presidential address]] on 29 December 1930 he outlined a vision of an independent state for Muslim-majority provinces in northwestern India:<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
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{{quote|I would like to see the [[Punjab (British India)|Punjab]], [[North-West Frontier Province (1901–1955)|North-West Frontier Province]], [[Sind province (1936–1955)|Sind]] and [[Baluchistan (Chief Commissioners Province)|Baluchistan]] amalgamated into a single state. Self-government within the [[British Empire]], or without the British Empire, the formation of a consolidated Northwest Indian Muslim state appears to me to be the final destiny of the Muslims, at least of Northwest India.<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />}}
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In his speech, Iqbal emphasised that unlike Christianity, Islam came with "legal concepts" with "civic significance," with its "religious ideals" considered as inseparable from social order: "therefore, the construction of a policy on national lines, if it means a displacement of the Islamic principle of solidarity, is simply unthinkable to a Muslim."<ref name="Naipaul">{{cite book |last=Naipaul |first=V. S. |title=Beyond Belief: Islamic Excursions Among the Converted Peoples |pages=250–52}}</ref>
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Iqbal thus stressed not only the need for the political unity of Muslim communities but the undesirability of blending the Muslim population into a wider society not based on Islamic principles.
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He thus became the first politician to articulate what would become known as the ''[[Two-nation theory]]''—that Muslims are a distinct nation and thus deserve political independence from other regions and communities of India.  Even as he rejected secularism and nationalism he would not elucidate or specify if his ideal Islamic state would construe a [[theocracy]], and criticized the "intellectual attitudes" of Islamic scholars ([[Ulema]]) as having "reduced the Law of Islam practically to the state of immobility".<ref name=iqbal-2004-1934-131>{{cite book |title=The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam |edition=reprint |orig-year=1934| date=2004 |location=Lahore |publisher=Sang-e-Meel Publications |page=131 }}</ref>
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The latter part of Iqbal's life was concentrated on political activity. He traveled across Europe and West Asia to garner political and financial support for the League, he reiterated the ideas of his 1932 address, and, during the [[Indian Round Table Conferences 1931–1933|Third round-Table Conference]], he opposed the Congress and proposals for transfer of power without considerable autonomy or independence for Muslim provinces.
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He would serve as president of the Punjab Muslim League, and would deliver speeches and publish articles in an attempt to rally Muslims across India as a single political entity. Iqbal consistently criticised feudal classes in Punjab as well as Muslim politicians averse to the League. Many unnoticed accounts of Iqbal's frustration toward Congress leadership were also pivotal in providing a vision for the two nation theory.
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=== Patron of the Journal Tolu-e-Islam ===
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[[File:TolueIslam1.jpg|thumb|Copy of the first journal of ''Tolu-e-Islam''.]]
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Iqbal was the first patron of [[The Journal Tolu-e-Islam|Tolu-e-Islam]], a historical, political, religious and cultural journal of the Muslims of British India. In 1935, according to his instructions, [[Syed Nazeer Niazi]] initiated and edited the journal,<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.tolueislam.com/Urdu/mag/1935/1935_Oct.djvu| archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20170804120220/http://webcode.ca/docs/1935_Oct.pdf| archivedate=August 4, 2017| title=Tolu-e-Islam – Under editorship of Syed Nazeer Niazi}}</ref> named after the famous poem of Iqbal, ''[[Tulu'i Islam]]''. Niazi also dedicated the first edition of this journal to Iqbal. For a long time, Iqbal wanted a journal to propagate his ideas and the aims and objectives of the [[All India Muslim League]]. The journal played an important role in the Pakistan movement.<ref name="brightpk.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.brightpk.com/personalities/allama-iqbal/|title=Allama Iqbal – The Great Poet And Philosopher:|publisher=Bright PK.com|date=15 February 2012|accessdate=28 May 2012}}</ref>
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Later, the journal was continued<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.tolueislam.com/Urdu/urdu.htm |title=Urdu Articles and Books |publisher=Tolueislam.com |date= |accessdate=22 May 2010 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100208215843/http://www.tolueislam.com/Urdu/urdu.htm |archivedate=8 February 2010 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> by [[Ghulam Ahmed Pervez]], who had already contributed many articles in its early editions.
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== Literary work ==
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{{Main|Works of Muhammad Iqbal}}
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=== Persian ===
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Iqbal's poetic works are written primarily in [[Persian language|Persian]] rather than [[Urdu]].{{citation needed|date=June 2015}} Among his 12,000 verses of poetry, about 7,000 verses are in Persian.{{citation needed|date=June 2015}} In 1915, he published his first collection of poetry, the ''[[Asrar-i-Khudi]]'' (''Secrets of the Self'') in Persian. The poems emphasise the spirit and self from a religious, spiritual perspective. Many critics have called this Iqbal's finest poetic work<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.allamaiqbal.com|title=Asrar-e-Khudi|first=Allama Iqbal Academy |last=Official website|accessdate=30 May 2006}}</ref> In ''Asrar-e-Khudi'', Iqbal explains his philosophy of "Khudi," or "Self."<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" /><ref name="books.google.co.uk" /> Iqbal's use of the term "Khudi" is synonymous with the word [[Ruh|"Rooh"]] mentioned in the Quran. "Rooh" is that divine spark which is present in every human being, and was present in Adam, for which God ordered all of the angels to prostrate in front of Adam. One has to make a great journey of transformation to realise that divine spirit.<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
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The same concept was used by Farid ud Din Attar in his "Mantaq-ul-Tair". He proves by various means that the whole universe obeys the will of the "Self." Iqbal condemns self-destruction. For him, the aim of life is self-realization and self-knowledge. He charts the stages through which the "Self" has to pass before finally arriving at its point of perfection, enabling the knower of the "Self" to become a vice-regent of God.<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
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In his ''[[Rumuz-i-Bekhudi]]'' (''Hints of Selflessness''), Iqbal seeks to prove the Islamic way of life is the best code of conduct for a nation's viability. A person must keep his individual characteristics intact, but once this is achieved he should sacrifice his personal ambitions for the needs of the nation. Man cannot realise the "Self" outside of society. Also in Persian and published in 1917, this group of poems has as its main themes the ideal community,<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" /> Islamic ethical and social principles, and the relationship between the individual and society. Although he is true throughout to Islam, Iqbal also recognises the positive analogous aspects of other religions. The ''Rumuz-i-Bekhudi'' complements the emphasis on the self in the ''Asrar-e-Khudi'' and the two collections are often put in the same volume under the title ''Asrar-i-Rumuz'' (''Hinting Secrets''). It is addressed to the world's Muslims.<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
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Iqbal's 1924 publication, the ''Payam-e-Mashriq'' (''The Message of the East'') is closely connected to the ''West-östlicher Diwan'' by the German poet Goethe. Goethe bemoans the West having become too materialistic in outlook, and expects the East will provide a message of hope to resuscitate spiritual values. Iqbal styles his work as a reminder to the West of the importance of morality, religion and civilisation by underlining the need for cultivating feeling, ardour and dynamism. He explains that an individual can never aspire to higher dimensions unless he learns of the nature of spirituality.<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" /> In his first visit to Afghanistan, he presented his book "Payam-e Mashreq" to [[Amanullah Khan|King Amanullah Khan]] in which he admired the liberal movements of Afghanistan against the British Empire. In 1933, he was officially invited to Afghanistan to join the meetings regarding the establishment of [[Kabul University]].<ref name="A Spiritual Bridge between East and West"/>
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The ''[[Zabur-e-Ajam]]'' (''[[Persian Psalms]]''), published in 1927, includes the poems ''Gulshan-e-Raz-e-Jadeed'' (''Garden of New Secrets'') and ''[[Bandagi Nama]]'' (''Book of Slavery''). In ''Gulshan-e-Raz-e-Jadeed'', Iqbal first poses questions, then answers them with the help of ancient and modern insight, showing how it affects and concerns the world of action. ''Bandagi Nama'' denounces slavery by attempting to explain the spirit behind the fine arts of enslaved societies. Here as in other books, Iqbal insists on remembering the past, doing well in the present and preparing for the future, while emphasising love, enthusiasm and energy to fulfil the ideal life.<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
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Iqbal's 1932 work, the ''[[Javed Nama]]'' (''Book of Javed'') is named after and in a manner addressed to his son, who is featured in the poems. It follows the examples of the works of [[Ibn Arabi]] and [[Dante Alighieri|Dante]]'s ''[[The Divine Comedy]]'', through [[magic realism|mystical and exaggerated depictions]] across time. Iqbal depicts himself as ''[[Zinda Rud]]'' ("A stream full of life") guided by Rumi, "the master," through various heavens and spheres and has the honour of approaching divinity and coming in contact with divine illuminations. In a passage re-living a historical period, Iqbal condemns the Muslim who were instrumental in the defeat and death of Nawab [[Siraj-ud-Daula]] of [[Bengal]] and [[Tipu Sultan]] of [[Mysore]] respectively by betraying them for the benefit of the [[British East India Company|British colonists]], and thus delivering their country to the shackles of slavery. At the end, by addressing his son Javid, he speaks to the young people at large, and provides guidance to the "new generation."<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
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His love of the Persian language is evident in his works and poetry. He says in one of his poems:<ref>''Kuliyat Iqbal'', Iqbal Academy Publications, 1990, Lahore, Pakistan</ref>
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{{blockquote|{{nastaliq|گرچہ ہندی در عذوبت شکر است}}<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.allamaiqbal.com/works/poetry/persian/asrar/text/01.htm|title=1|publisher=}}</ref>
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''garchi Hindi dar uzūbat <u>sh</u>akkar ast''
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{{nastaliq|طرز گفتار دري شيرين تر است}}
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''tarz-i guftar-i Dari <u>sh</u>irin tar ast''}}
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Translation: ''Even though in sweetness [[Hindi]]* is sugar'' – ''(but) speech method in [[Dari language|Dari]] (Persian dialect) is sweeter *''
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=== Urdu ===
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Iqbal's ''[[Bang-e-Dara]]'' (The Call of the Marching Bell), his first collection of Urdu poetry, was published in 1924. It was written in three distinct phases of his life.<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" /> The poems he wrote up to 1905—the year he left for England—reflect patriotism and imagery of nature, including the ''[[Tarana-e-Hind]]'' (The song of India),<ref name="A Spiritual Bridge between East and West"/> and ''[[Tarana-e-Milli]]'' (The song of the Community). The second set of poems date from 1905–1908, when Iqbal studied in Europe, and dwell upon the nature of [[European culture|European society]], which he emphasised had lost spiritual and religious values. This inspired Iqbal to write poems on the historical and cultural heritage of Islam and the Muslim community, with a global perspective. Iqbal urges the entire Muslim community, addressed as the ''[[Ummah]]'', to define personal, social and political existence by the values and teachings of Islam.<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
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Iqbal's works were in Persian for most of his career, but after 1930 his works were mainly in Urdu. His works in this period were often specifically directed at the Muslim masses of India, with an even stronger emphasis on Islam and Muslim spiritual and political reawakening. Published in 1935, the ''[[Gabriel's Wing|Bal-e-Jibril]]'' (Wings of [[Gabriel]]) is considered by many critics as his finest Urdu poetry, and was inspired by his visit to Spain, where he visited the monuments and legacy of the [[Al-Andalus|kingdom of the Moors]]. It consists of [[ghazals]], poems, [[quatrains]], [[epigrams]] and carries a strong sense of religious passion.<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
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The ''[[What should then be done O people of the East|Pas Cheh Bayed Kard ai Aqwam-e-Sharq]]'' (''What are we to do, O Nations of the East?'') includes the poem ''Musafir'' (''Traveler''). Again, Iqbal depicts [[Rumi]] as a character and an exposition of the mysteries of [[Shariah|Islamic laws]] and [[Sufi]] perceptions is given. Iqbal laments the dissension and disunity among the Indian Muslims as well as Muslim nations. ''Musafir'' is an account of one of Iqbal's journeys to Afghanistan, in which the [[Pashtun people]] are counselled to learn the "secret of Islam" and to "build up the self" within themselves.<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" /> Iqbal's final work was the ''[[Gift from Hijaz|Armughan-e-Hijaz]]'' (''The Gift of Hijaz''), published posthumously in 1938. The first part contains quatrains in Persian, and the second part contains some poems and [[epigram]]s in Urdu. The Persian quatrains convey the impression that the poet is travelling through the [[Hijaz]] in his imagination. Profundity of ideas and intensity of passion are the salient features of these short poems.<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
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[[File:Miqbal4.jpg|thumb|right|Iqbal wearing a [[bow tie]].]]
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Iqbal's vision of mystical experience is clear in one of his Urdu ghazals, which was written in London during his days of studying there. Some verses of that ghazal are:<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
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{{blockquote|At last the silent tongue of Hijaz has<br />
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announced to the ardent ear the tiding<br />
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That the covenant which had been given to the<br />
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desert-[dwellers] is going to be renewed<br />
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vigorously:<br />
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The lion who had emerged from the desert and<br />
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had toppled the Roman Empire is<br />
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As I am told by the angels, about to get up<br />
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again (from his slumbers.)<br />
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You the [dwellers] of the West, should know that<br />
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the world of God is not a shop (of yours).<br />
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Your imagined pure gold is about to lose it<br />
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standard value (as fixed by you).<br />
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Your civilization will commit suicide with its
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own daggers.<br />
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For a house built on a fragile bark of wood is not longlasting<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />}}
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=== English ===
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Iqbal also wrote two books on the topic of ''[[The Development of Metaphysics in Persia]]'' and ''[[The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam]]'' and many letters in the English language. In these, he revealed his thoughts regarding Persian ideology and Islamic Sufism – in particular, his beliefs that Islamic Sufism activates the searching soul to a superior perception of life. He also discussed philosophy, God and the meaning of prayer, human spirit and Muslim culture, as well as other political, social and religious problems.<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
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Iqbal was invited to Cambridge to participate in a conference in 1931, where he expressed his views, including that on [[Separation of church and state]] to participants which included the students of that university :<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
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{{quote|I would like to offer a few pieces of advice to the youngmen who are at present studying at Cambridge. ... I advise you to guard against atheism and materialism. The biggest blunder made by Europe was the separation of Church and State. This deprived their culture of moral soul and diverted it to the atheistic materialism. I had twenty-five years ago seen through the drawbacks of this civilization and therefore, had made some prophecies. They had been delivered by my tongue although I did not quite understand them. This happened in 1907. ... After six or seven years, my prophecies came true, word by word. The European war of 1914 was an outcome of the aforesaid mistakes made by the European nations in the separation of the Church and the State.<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />}}
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== Iqbal known in subcontinent ==
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=== As Poet of the East ===
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[[File:Pic iqbal 004.jpg|thumb|right|Allama Iqbal (In the Doctorate of Literature) after the conferment of this Degree by the University of the Punjab in 1933]]
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Iqbal has been recognised and quoted as "''Poet of the East''" by academics and institutions and media.<ref name="dailytimes" /><ref name="thenews">{{cite news|url=http://www.thenewstribe.com/2012/04/21/nation-observes-allama-iqbals-74th-death-anniversary/#.UCjm36EaN0x|title=Nation observes Allama Iqbal's 74th death anniversary|newspaper= The Newstribe newspaper|date=21 April 2012|accessdate=13 Nov 2015}}</ref><ref name="dawn">{{cite news|url=http://archives.dawn.com/weekly/yworld/archive/031108/yworld6.htm|title=Feature: Allama Iqbal—the spiritual father of Pakistan|newspaper=Daily Dawn|date=8 November 2003|accessdate=13 August 2012}}</ref><ref name=Taus-Bolstad>{{cite book|last=Taus-Bolstad|first=Stacy|title=Pakistan in Pictures|year=2008|publisher=Lerner|isbn=978-1-58013-452-1|page=70}}</ref><ref name=Sheikh>{{cite book|last=Sheikh|first=Naveed Shahzad|title=The New Politics of Islam: Pan-Islamic Foreign Policy in a World of States|year=2007|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-0-415-44453-8|page=83}}</ref><ref name=Jalal>{{cite book|last=Jalal|first=Ayesha|title=Self and Sovereignty: Individual and Community in South Asian Islam Since 1850|year=2000|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-0-415-22078-1|page=565}}</ref><ref name=YAHYA>{{cite journal |last=Yahya |first=MD |title=Traditions of Patriotism in Urdu Poetry: A Critical Study with Special Reference to the Poet of the East Allama Iqbal and His Poetry |journal=Journal of Contemporary Research|year=2013|volume=1|issue=2|url=http://scholarsworld.net/english/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/Paper-7.pdf|issn=2319-5789}}</ref>
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The Vice-Chancellor, [[Quaid-e-Azam University]], Dr Masoom Yasinzai described in a seminar as chief guest addressing to a distinguished gathering of educationists and intellectuals, that Iqbal is not a poet of the East only, actually he is a universal poet. Moreover, Iqbal is not restricted to any specific segment of the world community but he is for the entire humanity.<ref name="preston">{{cite web|url=http://www.preston.edu.pk/allama_iqbal.php|title=Seminar on Allama Iqbal held at Preston University|publisher=Preston.Edu.PK|accessdate=13 August 2012}}</ref>
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{{quote|Yet it should also be born in mind that whilst dedicating his Eastern Divan to Goethe, the cultural icon par excellence, Iqbal's Payam-i-Mashriq constituted both a reply as well as a corrective to the Western Divan of Goethe. For by stylising himself as the representative of the East, Iqbal's endeavour was to talk on equal terms to Goethe as the representative of West."<ref name="orient" />}}
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Iqbal's revolutionary works through his poetry awakened the Muslims of the [[Indian subcontinent|subcontinent]]. Iqbal was confident that the Muslims had long been suppressed by the colonial enlargement and growth of the West. In this concept Iqbal is recognised as the "Poet of the East".<ref name="dawn" /><ref name="academia">{{cite book|url=https://amu-in.academia.edu/TauseefAhmadParray/Papers/400725/Democracy_in_Islam_The_Views_of_Several_Modern_Muslim_Scholars|title=
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Democracy in Islam: The Views of Several Modern Muslim Scholars|publisher=Amu-In Academia.Edu|accessdate=14 August 2012|page=143}}</ref><ref name="urdu">{{cite book|url=http://www.urdustudies.com/pdf/20/03FaruqiIqbal.pdf|title=How to Read Iqbal|publisher=Urdu Studies.com|accessdate=14 August 2012|page=2}}</ref>
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{{quote|So to conclude, let me cite Annemarie Schimmel in Gabriel's Wing who lauds Iqbal's 'unique way of weaving a grand tapestry of thought from eastern and western yarns' (p. xv), a creative activity which, to cite my own volume Revisioning Iqbal, endows Muhammad Iqbal with the stature of a "''universalist poet''" and thinker whose principal aim was to explore mitigating alternative discourses with a view to constructing a bridge between the 'East' and the 'West'.<ref name="orient">{{cite book|url=http://www.orient-institut.org/Library/Files/ConferenceIqbal.pdf|title=This document contains both interventions from Prof. Dharampal-Frick and Mrs. Al Sanyoura Baasiri- Gita Dharampal-Frick – (South Asia Institute, University of Heidelberg)|publisher=Orient Institut.Org|accessdate=15 August 2012|pages=5–12}}</ref>}}
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Urdu world is very familiar Iqbal as the "Poet of the East".<ref name="urdu" /> Iqbal is also called ''Muffakir-e-Pakistan'', "The Thinker of Pakistan") and ''Hakeem-ul-Ummat'' "The Sage of the [[Ummah]]"). The Pakistan government officially named him a "[[List of national poets|national poet]]".<ref name="Iqbal Academy Pakistan" />
 +
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== Iqbal in Iran ==
 +
In Iran, he is famous as ''Iqbāl-e Lāhorī''. (Iqbal of Lahore) Iqbal's "Asrare-i-Khudi" and "Bal-i-Jibreel"  are known in Iran, while many scholars in Iran have recognised the importance of Iqbal's poetry in inspiring and sustaining the [[Iranian Revolution]] of 1979.<ref name="Iqbal-Iran1">{{cite web|title=The Political Philosophy of Muhammad Iqbal|url=http://blogs.tribune.com.pk/story/19455/137th-birthday-what-allama-iqbals-poetry-has-taught-me-so-far/|work=Osama Sajid|date=25 March 2011|accessdate=25 October 2014}}</ref><ref name="thefriday" /> During the early phases of the revolutionary movement, it was a common thing to see people gathering in a park or corner to listen to someone reciting Iqbal's blood-warming Persian poetry, that is why people of all ages in Iran today are familiar with at least some of his poetry, notably "Az-zabur-e-Ajam".<ref name="Iqbal-Iran2">{{cite web|title=Iqbal and the Iranians Iqbal|url=http://www.dawn.com/news/656464/heritage-eghbal-i-lahuri-and-the-iranians|work=Nasir Riaz|date=25 March 2011|accessdate=25 October 2014}}</ref><ref name="thefriday" />
 +
 +
In his analysis of the Persian poetry of Muhammad Iqbal, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei states that "we have a large number of non-Persian-speaking poets in the history of our literature, but I cannot point out any of them whose poetry possesses the qualities of Iqbal's Persian poetry. Iqbal was not acquainted with Persian idiom, as he spoke Urdu at home and talked to his friends in Urdu or English. He did not know the rules of Persian prose writing."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.khamenei.de/books/iqbal.htm |title=Iqbal |publisher=Khamenei.de |accessdate=19 June 2009 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090618081641/http://www.khamenei.de/books/iqbal.htm |archivedate=18 June 2009 |deadurl=yes |df=dmy}}</ref>
 +
 +
After the death of Iqbal in 1938, by the early 1950s, Iqbal became known among the intelligentsia of the academic circles of Iran. Iran poet laureate Muhammad Taqi Bahar universalize Iqbal in Iran. He highly praised the work of Iqbal in Persian.
 +
 +
In 1952, the Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadeq, the national hero because of his oil nationalisation policy broadcast a special radio message on Iqbal Day and praised his role in the struggle of the Indian Muslims against British imperialism. At the end of the 1950s, Iranians published the complete works of Persian. In the 1960s, Iqbal thesis on Persian philosophy was translated from English to Persian.
 +
Ali Shariati, a Sorbonne-educated sociologist, supported Iqbal as his role model as Iqbal had Rumi. It is the best example of admiration and appreciation of Iran that they gave him the place of honour in the pantheon of the Persian elegy writers.
 +
 +
In 1970, Iran realised Iqbal. Iqbal verses appeared on the banners and poetry recited at meetings of the intellectuals. Iqbal inspired many intellectuals, including famous names, Ali Shariati, Mehdi Bazargan, Sayyed Ali Khamenei and Dr Abdulkarim Soroush.<ref name="thefriday">{{cite news|url=http://www.thefridaytimes.com/tft/love-letter-to-persia/|title=Love letter to Persia|newspaper=The Friday Times|date=25 April 2014|accessdate=13 September 2016}}</ref>
 +
 +
Key Iranian thinkers and leaders who were influenced by Iqbal's poetry during the rise of the Iranian revolution include [[Ayatollah Ali Khamenei]], [[Ali Shariati]], and [[Abdolkarim Soroush]]; although much of the revolutionary guard was intimately familiar with numerous verses of Iqbal's body of poetry.<ref name="Iqbal-Iran3">{{cite web|title=The Political Philosophy of Muhammad Iqbal|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Fk8hAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA201&lpg=PA201&dq=Iqbal+lahori+iranian+revolution&source=bl&ots=j4U0nGYIiy&sig=fkVesX6jDCcorue_33jUaFDa5E4&hl=en&sa=X&ei=Q1VKVPXwBozx8gXY6ILoBQ&ved=0CCMQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=Iqbal%20lahori%20iranian%20revolution&f=false|work=Iqbal Singh Sevea|date=25 March 2011|accessdate=25 October 2014}}</ref> In fact, at the inauguration of the First Iqbal Summit in Tehran (1986), The Supreme Leader of the Iranian Revolution, [[Ayatollah Khamenei]] stated that in its 'conviction that the Quran and Islam are to be made the basis of all revolutions and movements', Iran was 'exactly following the path that was shown to us by Iqbal'.<ref name="Iqbal-Iran3" /> Ali Shariati, who has been described as a core ideologue for the Iranian Revolution, described Iqbal as a figure who brought a message of "rejuvenation", "awakening" and "power" to the Muslim World.<ref name="Iqbal-Iran5">{{cite web|title=Iqbal: Manifestation of the Islamic Spirit|url=https://books.google.com/books/about/Iqbal.html?id=ivogAAAACAAJ&redir_esc=y|work=Iqbal Singh Sevea|date=25 March 2011|accessdate=25 October 2014}}</ref>
 +
 +
== International influence ==
 +
=== Iqbal and the West ===
 +
[[File:Iqbal Street in Heidelberg Germany.jpg|thumb|Name plate of a street ''Iqbal-Ufer'', [[Heidelberg]], Germany, honoured in the name of Iqbal.<ref name="Iqbal-West1">{{cite web|title=Luxury edition of works by poet Muhammad Iqbal|url=http://www.uni-heidelberg.de/presse/news2011/pm20110325_sai_raritaet_en.html|work=[[University of Heidelberg]]|date=25 March 2011|accessdate=26 April 2012}}</ref>]]
 +
Iqbal's views on the Western world were applauded by men including [[United States Supreme Court]] Associate Justice [[William O. Douglas]], who said that Iqbal's beliefs had "universal appeal".<ref name="alaamaiqbal review 1985" /> In his Soviet biography N. P. Anikoy wrote:
 +
 +
{{quote|[Iqbal is] great for his passionate condemnation of weak will and passiveness, his angry protest against inequality, discrimination and oppression in all forms i.e., economic, social, political, national, racial, religious, etc., his preaching of optimism, an active attitude towards life and man's high purpose in the world, in a word, he is great for his assertion of the noble ideals and principles of humanism, democracy, peace and friendship among peoples.<ref name="alaamaiqbal review 1985" />}}
 +
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Others, including [[Wilfred Cantwell Smith]], stated that with Iqbal's anti-capitalist holdings he was 'anti-intellect', because "capitalism fosters intellect".<ref name="alaamaiqbal review 1985" /> Professor Freeland Abbot objected to Iqbal's views saying that Iqbal's view of the West was based on the role of imperialism and Iqbal was not immersed enough in Western culture to learn about the various benefits of the modern democracies, economic practices and science.<ref name="alaamaiqbal review 1985">{{cite web|last=Review|first=Iqbal|year=1985|url=http://www.allamaiqbal.com/publications/journals/review/oct85/index.htm |title=American, West European and Soviet Attitudes to Iqbal |format=PHP|accessdate=16 February 2012}}</ref> Critics of Abbot's viewpoint note that Iqbal was raised and educated in the European way of life, and spent enough time there to grasp the general concepts of Western civilisation.<ref name="alaamaiqbal review 1985" />
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 +
== Bibliography ==
 +
{{Main|Muhammad Iqbal bibliography}}
 +
'''Prose book in Urdu'''
 +
* ''[[Ilm ul Iqtisad]]'' (1903)<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
 +
 +
'''Prose books in English'''
 +
* ''[[The Development of Metaphysics in Persia]]'' (1908)<ref name="Iqbal Academy Pakistan">{{cite web|url=http://www.allamaiqbal.com|title=Welcome to Allama Iqbal Site|publisher=}}</ref><ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
 +
* ''[[The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam]]'' (1930)<ref name="Iqbal Academy Pakistan" /><ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
 +
 +
'''Poetic books in Persian'''
 +
* ''[[Asrar-i-Khudi]]'' (1915)<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
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* ''[[Rumuz-i-Bekhudi]]'' (1917)<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
 +
* ''[[Payam-i-Mashriq]]'' (1923)<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
 +
* ''[[Zabur-i-Ajam]]'' (1927)<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
 +
* ''[[Javid Nama]]'' (1932)<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
 +
* ''[[What should then be done O people of the East|Pas Cheh Bayed Kard ai Aqwam-e-Sharq]]'' (1936)<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
 +
* ''[[Gift from Hijaz|Armughan-e-Hijaz]]'' (1938)<ref name="Iqbal Academy Pakistan" /><ref name="allamaiqbal.com" /><ref name="brightpk.com" /> (in Persian and Urdu)
 +
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'''Poetic books in Urdu'''
 +
* ''[[Bang-i-Dara]]'' (1924)<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
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* ''[[Bal-i-Jibril]]'' (1935)<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
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* ''[[The Rod of Moses|Zarb-i Kalim]]'' (1936)<ref name="allamaiqbal.com" />
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== Gallery ==
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<gallery>
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File:Father of Allama Iqbal.jpg|Father of Allama Iqbal(Shaikh Noor Muhammad)
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File:Iqbal in 1931.jpg|Iqbal in London in 1931
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File:Iqbal Second Round Table Conference.jpeg|At a party during the 2nd Round Table Conference in London in 1931
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File:Pic iqbal 006.jpg|A view of the conference in West Jerusalem. Iqbal is seen sitting on the extreme right in the first row(1931)
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File:Pic Iqbal 07.jpg|Allama Iqbal reception given by the National League, London in 1932
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File:Iqbal in 1933.jpg|Allama Muhammad Iqbal in 1933
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File:Iqbal11.jpg|Iqbal in a reception given by citizens of Lahore in 1933
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File:Iqbal in 1934.gif|Iqbal in 1934
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File:Iqbal in Afghanistan.jpg|Allama in Afghanistan with Sulmain Nadavi and Sir Ross Masood
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</gallery>
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== See also ==
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{{Portal|Urdu}}
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* [[Iblees Ki Majlis-e-Shura]], a poem by Iqbal
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* [[List of Pakistani poets]]
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* [[List of Urdu language poets]]
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* [[List of Muslim philosophers]]
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* [[Iqbal Academy Pakistan]]
 +
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==References==
 +
{{reflist|30em}}
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== Further reading ==
 +
* Kaifee, Zeenat. ‘Allāma Iqbāl as depicted in the works of Dr. Annemarie Schimmel, Quarterly Naqd-O-Taḥqīq, ISSN 2454-2563, Editor: S. Naqi Abbas (Kaify), Volume 1, Issue I, pp.&nbsp;58–67, Jan–Feb–Mar. 2015, New Delhi (in Persian)
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* {{Cite book| first=Khurram Ali|last=Shafique| title=Iqbal: His Life and Our Times| publisher=ECO Cultural Institute & Iqbal Academy Pakistan|  year=2014| isbn=978-0-9571416-6-7}}
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* {{Cite book| first=Kak|last=Ram Nath| authorlink=Ram Nath Kak| title=Autumn Leaves: Kashmiri Reminiscences|url=http://www.koausa.org/Books/AutumnLeaves| publisher=Vitasta| place=India| year=1995| isbn=81-86588-00-0}}
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* {{Citation| first=Mir|last=Mustansir| title=Iqbal| publisher=I.B. Tauris| year=2006| isbn=1-84511-094-3}}
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* {{Cite book| first=Munawwar|last=Muhammad| authorlink=Muhammad Munawwar| title=Iqbal-Poet Philosopher of Islam| isbn=969-416-061-8}}
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* {{cite book|first=Debnath|last=Sailen|title=Secularism: Western and Indian|isbn=978-81-269-1366-4|publisher=Atlantic Publishers| place=New Delhi}}
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* {{Cite book| first=Naipaul|last=V.S.| authorlink=V. S. Naipaul| title=Beyond Belief: Islamic Excursions Among the Converted Peoples| publisher=Random House| place=USA| year=1998| isbn=0-375-50118-5}}
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* {{Citation| first=Schimmel|last=Annemarie| authorlink=Annemarie Schimmel| title=Gabriel's Wing: a study of the religious ideas of Sir Muhammad Iqbal| publisher=E. J. Brill| place=Leiden, Netherlands| year=1963}}
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* {{cite news|title=Special report: The enduring vision of Iqbal 1877-1938|url=https://www.dawn.com/news/1368130/special-report-the-enduring-vision-of-iqbal-1877-1938|accessdate=9 November 2017|work=DAWN|date=9 November 2017}}
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== External links ==
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* [http://www.alifseye.com/poetries/subcategory/allama-iqbal-poetry-in-urdu/65 ''alifseye'', Allama Iqbal poetry in Urdu, November 16, 2016]
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{{Commons category|Muhammad Iqbal}}
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{{Wikiquote}}
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* [http://www.iqbalcyberlibrary.net/ Iqbal Cyber Library]
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* [http://www.columbia.edu/itc/mealac/pritchett/00urdu/iqbal The collection of Urdu poems: Columbia University]
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* [http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/293320/Sir-Muhammad-Iqbal Encyclopedia Britannica.]
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* [https://www.urdupoetrynetwork.com/category/allama-iqbal-poetry/ Allama Iqbal Urdu Poetry Collection]
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* {{Internet Archive author |name=Allama Iqbal |sopt=t}}
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{{Muhammad Iqbal}}
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{{Islamic philosophy}}
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{{Pakistan Movement}}
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{{National symbols of Pakistan}}
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{{Persian literature}}
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{{Authority control}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Iqbal, Allama Muhammad}}
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[[Category:Muhammad Iqbal| ]]
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[[Category:Leaders of the Pakistan Movement]]
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[[Category:Pakistani revolutionaries]]
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[[Category:Urdu poets]]
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[[Category:Anti-nationalists]]
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[[Category:Indian male poets]]
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[[Category:Knights Bachelor]]
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[[Category:Indian knights]]
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[[Category:20th-century Muslim scholars of Islam]]
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[[Category:Government College University, Lahore alumni]]
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[[Category:Heidelberg University alumni]]
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[[Category:Persian-language poets]]
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[[Category:Persian-language writers]]
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[[Category:Islamic philosophers]]
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[[Category:Contemporary Indian philosophers]]
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[[Category:Kashmiri people]]
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[[Category:Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge]]
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[[Category:Alumni of the Inns of Court School of Law]]
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[[Category:Members of Lincoln's Inn]]
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[[Category:Muhammad Iqbal family]]
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[[Category:20th-century philosophers]]
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[[Category:1877 births]]
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[[Category:1938 deaths]]
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[[Category:People from Sialkot]]
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[[Category:Punjabi people]]
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[[Category:Writers from Lahore]]
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[[Category:Urdu theologians]]
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[[Category:Urdu children's writers]]
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[[Category:Urdu letter writers]]
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[[Category:Urdu religious writers]]
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[[Category:20th-century Urdu writers]]
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[[Category:Pakistan Movement]]
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[[Category:Government College University, Lahore faculty]]
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[[Category:Oriental College alumni]]
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[[Category:Murray College alumni]]
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[[Category:Indian Islamists]]
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[[Category:Nondenominational Muslims]]
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[[Category:Pakistani male poets]]
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[[Category:20th-century Indian poets]]
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[[Category:20th-century Pakistani poets]]

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Template:Other people Template:EngvarB Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox philosopher

Muhammad Iqbal (Template:Lang-ur) (November 9, 1877 – April 21, 1938), widely known as Allama Iqbal, was a poet, philosopher, and politician, as well as an academic, barrister and scholar[1][2] in British India who is widely regarded as having inspired the Pakistan Movement. He is called the "Spiritual Father of Pakistan."[3] He is considered one of the most important figures in Urdu literature,[4] with literary work in both Urdu and Persian.[2][4]

Iqbal is admired as a prominent poet by Indians, Pakistanis, Iranians and other international scholars of literature.[5][6][7] Though Iqbal is best known as an eminent poet, he is also a highly acclaimed "Muslim philosophical thinker of modern times".[2][7] His first poetry book, The Secrets of the Self, appeared in the Persian language in 1915, and other books of poetry include The Secrets of Selflessness, Message from the East and Persian Psalms. Amongst these, his best known Urdu works are The Call of the Marching Bell, Gabriel's Wing, The Rod of Moses and a part of Gift from Hijaz.[8] Along with his Urdu and Persian poetry, his Urdu and English lectures and letters have been very influential in cultural, social, religious and political disputes.[8]

In 1923, he was knighted by King George V,[9] granting him the title "Sir".[10] While studying law and philosophy in England, Iqbal became a member of the London branch of the All-India Muslim League.[7][8] Later, during the League's December 1930 session, he delivered his most famous presidential speech known as the Allahabad Address in which he pushed for the creation of a Muslim state in northwest India.[7][8]

In much of South Asia and the Urdu-speaking world, Iqbal is regarded as the Shair-e-Mashriq (Template:Lang-ur, "Poet of the East").[11][12][13] He is also called Mufakkir-e-Pakistan (Template:Lang-ur, "The Thinker of Pakistan"), Musawar-e-Pakistan (Template:Lang-ur, "Artist of Pakistan") and Hakeem-ul-Ummat (Template:Lang-ur, "The Sage of the Ummah"). The Pakistan government officially named him "National Poet of Pakistan".[7] His birthday Yōm-e Welādat-e Muḥammad Iqbāl (Template:Lang-ur), or Iqbal Day, is a public holiday in Pakistan.[14]

Iqbal's house is still located in Sialkot and is recognized as Iqbal's Manzil and is open for visitors. His other house where he lived most of his life and died is in Lahore, named as Javed Manzil.( "Javed Manzil". ualberta.ca. Retrieved 24 July 2014.) The museum is located on Allama Iqbal Road near Lahore Railway Station, Punjab, Pakistan.[15]Template:Better source It was protected under the Punjab Antiquities Act of 1975, and declared a Pakistani national monument in 1977.[15]Template:Better source needed

Personal life

Background

Iqbal was born on 9 November 1877 in a ethnic Kashmiri family in Gujrat within the Punjab Province of British India (now in Pakistan).[16] His grandfather's name was Sheikh Mohammad Rafique. His ancestors were Kashmiri Brahmans of the Sapro clan and had converted to Islam around 200 years ago in the time of Bud Shah. The first ancestor to convert to Islam has been identified as Haji Lol a Sufi mystic so named because of his love for Haj[17] In the 19th century, when the Sikh Empire was conquering Kashmir, his grandfather's family migrated to Punjab. Iqbal often mentioned and commemorated his Kashmiri lineage in his writings.[18][12]

File:Iqbal and son Javid in 1930.jpg
Allama Iqbal with his son Javed Iqbal in 1930
File:Mother of Iqbal.jpg
Iqbal's mother, who died on 9 November 1914. Iqbal expressed his feeling of pathos in a poetic form after her death.

Iqbal's father, Sheikh Noor Muhammad (died 1930), was a tailor, not formally educated but a religious man.[19][20] Iqbal's mother Imam Bibi, a Punjabi Muslim from Sialkot, was described as a polite and humble woman who helped the poor and her neighbours with their problems. She died on 9 November 1914 in Sialkot.[21][22] Iqbal loved his mother, and on her death he expressed his feelings of pathos in a poetic form elegy.[19] Template:Blockquote

Early education

Iqbal was four years old when he was admitted to the mosque to learn the Qur'an. He learned the Arabic language from his teacher, Syed Mir Hassan, the head of the madrasa and professor of Arabic at Scotch Mission College in Sialkot, where he matriculated in 1893.[23] He received Intermediate with the Faculty of Arts diploma in 1895.[12][22][24] The same year he enrolled at Government College University, where he obtained his Bachelor of Arts in philosophy, English literature and Arabic in 1897, and won the Khan Bahadurddin F.S. Jalaluddin medal as he performed well in Arabic.[22] In 1899, he received his Master of Arts degree from the same college and had the first place in University of the Punjab.[12][22][24]

Marriages

Iqbal married three times. His first marriage was held in 1895, when he was 18 years old, shortly after he had completed his Intermediate and enrolled at Government College, Lahore. The bride, Karim Bibi, was the daughter of physician Khan Bahadur Ata Muhammad Khan. Her sister was the mother of director and music composer Khwaja Khurshid Anwar.[25][26] The match was arranged by their families in the usual Indian manner, and the couple were blessed with two children, a daughter Miraj Begum and a son, Aftab Iqbal. Later Iqbal married Sardar Begum, and they became the parents of a son, Javed Iqbal, who was to become a judge. Iqbal's third marriage was with Mukhtar Begum and it was held in December 1914, shortly after the death of Iqbal's mother in November the same year.[11][22]

Higher education in Europe

Iqbal was influenced by the teachings of Sir Thomas Arnold, his philosophy teacher at Government college Lahore. Arnold's teachings determined Iqbal to pursue higher education in the West, and in 1905, he travelled to England for that purpose. Iqbal qualified for a scholarship from Trinity College, University of Cambridge and obtained Bachelor of Arts in 1906, and in the same year he was called to the bar as a barrister from Lincoln's Inn. In 1907, Iqbal moved to Germany to pursue his doctoral studies, and earned a Doctor of Philosophy degree from the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich in 1908. Working under the guidance of Friedrich Hommel, Iqbal's doctoral thesis entitled The Development of Metaphysics in Persia was published.[12][27][28][29]

During Iqbal's stay in Heidelberg in 1907 his German professor Emma Wegenast taught him about Goethe's Faust, Heine and Nietzsche.[30] During his study in Europe, Iqbal began to write poetry in Persian. He prioritised it because he believed he had found an easy way to express his thoughts. He would write continuously in Persian throughout his life.[12]

Iqbal had a great interest in Islamic studies, especially Sufi beliefs. Much of it can be evident from his poetry, in which apart from the independence ideologies he also explores concepts of submission to Allah and following the path of Prophet Muhammad.

Academic career

File:Iqbal Youth.jpg
Photograph taken during Allama Iqbal's youth in 1899

Iqbal, after completing his Master of Arts degree in 1899, began his career as a reader of Arabic at Oriental College and shortly afterwards was selected as a junior professor of philosophy at Government College Lahore, where he had also been a student in the past. He worked there until he left for England in 1905. In 1908, he returned from England and joined the same college again as a professor of philosophy and English literature.[31] In the same period Iqbal began practising law at Chief Court Lahore, but he soon quit law practice and devoted himself in literary works, becoming an active member of Anjuman-e-Himayat-e-Islam.[22] In 1919, he became the general secretary of the same organisation. Iqbal's thoughts in his work primarily focus on the spiritual direction and development of human society, centred around experiences from his travels and stays in Western Europe and the Middle East. He was profoundly influenced by Western philosophers such as Friedrich Nietzsche, Henri Bergson and Goethe.[19][30]

The poetry and philosophy of Mawlana Rumi bore the deepest influence on Iqbal's mind. Deeply grounded in religion since childhood, Iqbal began concentrating intensely on the study of Islam, the culture and history of Islamic civilisation and its political future, while embracing Rumi as "his guide".[19] Iqbal would feature Rumi in the role of guide in many of his poems. Iqbal's works focus on reminding his readers of the past glories of Islamic civilisation, and delivering the message of a pure, spiritual focus on Islam as a source for socio-political liberation and greatness. Iqbal denounced political divisions within and amongst Muslim nations, and frequently alluded to and spoke in terms of the global Muslim community or the Ummah.[8][19]

Iqbal's poetry has been translated into many European languages, at the time when his work was famous during the early part of the 20th century.[7] Iqbal's Asrar-i-Khudi and Javed Nama were translated into English by R. A. Nicholson and A. J. Arberry respectively.[7][13]

Career as a Lawyer

Iqbal was not only a prolific writer but was also a known Advocate. He used to appear before the Lahore High Court in both civil and criminal matters. There are more than 100 reported judgments to his name.

Final years and death

In 1933, after returning from a trip to Spain and Afghanistan, Iqbal suffered from a mysterious throat illness.[32] He spent his final years helping Chaudhry Niaz Ali Khan to establish the Dar ul Islam Trust Institute at Jamalpur estate near Pathankot,[33][34] where there were plans to subsidise studies in classical Islam and contemporary social science. He also advocated for an independent Muslim state.

File:Pic iqbal 001.gif
Iqbal as a Barrister-at-Law

Iqbal ceased practising law in 1934 and was granted a pension by the Nawab of Bhopal. In his final years, he frequently visited the Dargah of famous Sufi Ali Hujwiri in Lahore for spiritual guidance. After suffering for months from his illness, Iqbal died in Lahore on 21 April 1938.[8][12] His tomb is located in Hazuri Bagh, the enclosed garden between the entrance of the Badshahi Mosque and the Lahore Fort, and official guards are provided by the Government of Pakistan.

File:AllamaIqbal Tomb Night.jpg
A night view of the tomb

Iqbal is commemorated widely in Pakistan, where he is regarded as the ideological founder of the state. His Tarana-e-Hind is a song that is widely used in India as a patriotic song speaking of communal harmony. His birthday is annually commemorated in Pakistan as Iqbal Day. Iqbal is the namesake of many public institutions, including the Allama Iqbal Campus Punjab University in Lahore, the Allama Iqbal Medical College in Lahore, Iqbal Stadium in Faisalabad, Allama Iqbal Open University in Pakistan, Iqbal Memorial Institute in Srinagar, the Allama Iqbal International Airport in Lahore, Iqbal Hostel in Government College University, Lahore, the Allama Iqbal hall in Nishtar Medical College in Multan, Gulshan-e-Iqbal Town in Karachi, Allama Iqbal Town in Lahore, and Allama Iqbal Hall at Aligarh Muslim University.

The government and public organisations have sponsored the establishment of educational institutions, colleges and schools dedicated to Iqbal, and have established the Iqbal Academy Pakistan to research, teach and preserve his works, literature and philosophy. Allama Iqbal Stamps Society was established for the promotion of Iqbaliyat in philately and in other hobbies. His son Javid Iqbal has served as a justice of the Supreme Court of Pakistan. Javaid Manzil was Iqbal's last residence.[35]

Efforts and influences

Political

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As Iqbal was interested in the national affairs since his youth and he had got considerable recognition after his return in 1908 from England by Punjabi elite, he was closely associated with Mian Muhammad Shafi. So when All-India Muslim League was expanded to provincial level and Mian Mohammad Shafi got major role to play in the structural organization of Provincial League, Iqbal was made one of the three first joint secretaries of the Punjab Muslim League with Shaikh Abdul Aziz and Maulvi Mahbub Alam.[36] While dividing his time between law practice and poetry, Iqbal had remained active in the Muslim League. He did not support Indian involvement in World War I and remained in close touch with Muslim political leaders such as Mohammad Ali Jouhar and Muhammad Ali Jinnah. He was a critic of the mainstream Indian National Congress, which he regarded as dominated by Hindus, and was disappointed with the League when during the 1920s, it was absorbed in factional divides between the pro-British group led by Sir Muhammad Shafi and the centrist group led by Jinnah.[37]Template:Unreliable source?

File:Iqbalpolitics.jpg
Iqbal with Muslim politicians.
(L to R): M. Iqbal (third), Syed Zafarul Hasan (sixth) at Aligarh Muslim University

In November 1926, with the encouragement of friends and supporters, Iqbal contested the election for a seat in the Punjab Legislative Assembly from the Muslim district of Lahore, and defeated his opponent by a margin of 3,177 votes.[8] He supported the constitutional proposals presented by Jinnah with the aim of guaranteeing Muslim political rights and influence in a coalition with the Congress, and worked with the Aga Khan and other Muslim leaders to mend the factional divisions and achieve unity in the Muslim League.[37]Template:Unreliable source? While in Lahore he was a friend of Abdul Sattar Ranjoor.[38]

Iqbal, Jinnah and concept of Pakistan

Ideologically separated from Congress Muslim leaders, Iqbal had also been disillusioned with the politicians of the Muslim League owing to the factional conflict that plagued the League in the 1920s. Discontent with factional leaders like Muhammad Shafi and Fazl-ur-Rahman, Iqbal came to believe that only Jinnah was a political leader capable of preserving unity and fulfilling the League's objectives of Muslim political empowerment. Building a strong, personal correspondence with Jinnah, Iqbal was an influential force in convincing Jinnah to end his self-imposed exile in London, return to India and take charge of the League. Iqbal firmly believed that Jinnah was the only leader capable of drawing Indian Muslims to the League and maintaining party unity before the British and the Congress:

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While Iqbal espoused the idea of Muslim-majority provinces in 1930, Jinnah would continue to hold talks with the Congress through the decade and only officially embraced the goal of Pakistan in 1940. Some historians postulate that Jinnah always remained hopeful for an agreement with the Congress and never fully desired the partition of India.[39] Iqbal's close correspondence with Jinnah is speculated by some historians as having been responsible for Jinnah's embrace of the idea of Pakistan. Iqbal elucidated to Jinnah his vision of a separate Muslim state in a letter sent on 21 June 1937:

File:Iqbal Allahabad.jpg
Allama Iqbal in Allahabad with other Muslim leaders

Template:Quote Iqbal, serving as president of the Punjab Muslim League, criticised Jinnah's political actions, including a political agreement with Punjabi leader Sir Sikandar Hyat Khan, whom Iqbal saw as a representative of feudal classes and not committed to Islam as the core political philosophy. Nevertheless, Iqbal worked constantly to encourage Muslim leaders and masses to support Jinnah and the League. Speaking about the political future of Muslims in India, Iqbal said:

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Revival of Islamic polity

File:Iqbal-RahmatAli.jpg
Iqbal with Choudhary Rahmat Ali and other Muslim leaders

Iqbal's six English lectures were published in Lahore in 1930, and then by the Oxford University Press in 1934 in a book titled The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam. The lectures had been delivered at Madras, Hyderabad and Aligarh.[8] These lectures dwell on the role of Islam as a religion as well as a political and legal philosophy in the modern age.[8] In these lectures Iqbal firmly rejects the political attitudes and conduct of Muslim politicians, whom he saw as morally misguided, attached to power and without any standing with the Muslim masses.

Iqbal expressed fears that not only would secularism weaken the spiritual foundations of Islam and Muslim society, but that India's Hindu-majority population would crowd out Muslim heritage, culture and political influence. In his travels to Egypt, Afghanistan, Iran and Turkey, he promoted ideas of greater Islamic political co-operation and unity, calling for the shedding of nationalist differences.[19] He also speculated on different political arrangements to guarantee Muslim political power; in a dialogue with Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, Iqbal expressed his desire to see Indian provinces as autonomous units under the direct control of the British government and with no central Indian government. He envisaged autonomous Muslim provinces in India. Under a single Indian union he feared for Muslims, who would suffer in many respects especially with regard to their existentially separate entity as Muslims.[8]

Iqbal was elected president of the Muslim League in 1930 at its session in Allahabad in the United Provinces, as well as for the session in Lahore in 1932. In his presidential address on 29 December 1930 he outlined a vision of an independent state for Muslim-majority provinces in northwestern India:[8]

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In his speech, Iqbal emphasised that unlike Christianity, Islam came with "legal concepts" with "civic significance," with its "religious ideals" considered as inseparable from social order: "therefore, the construction of a policy on national lines, if it means a displacement of the Islamic principle of solidarity, is simply unthinkable to a Muslim."[40] Iqbal thus stressed not only the need for the political unity of Muslim communities but the undesirability of blending the Muslim population into a wider society not based on Islamic principles.

He thus became the first politician to articulate what would become known as the Two-nation theory—that Muslims are a distinct nation and thus deserve political independence from other regions and communities of India. Even as he rejected secularism and nationalism he would not elucidate or specify if his ideal Islamic state would construe a theocracy, and criticized the "intellectual attitudes" of Islamic scholars (Ulema) as having "reduced the Law of Islam practically to the state of immobility".[41]

The latter part of Iqbal's life was concentrated on political activity. He traveled across Europe and West Asia to garner political and financial support for the League, he reiterated the ideas of his 1932 address, and, during the Third round-Table Conference, he opposed the Congress and proposals for transfer of power without considerable autonomy or independence for Muslim provinces.

He would serve as president of the Punjab Muslim League, and would deliver speeches and publish articles in an attempt to rally Muslims across India as a single political entity. Iqbal consistently criticised feudal classes in Punjab as well as Muslim politicians averse to the League. Many unnoticed accounts of Iqbal's frustration toward Congress leadership were also pivotal in providing a vision for the two nation theory.

Patron of the Journal Tolu-e-Islam

File:TolueIslam1.jpg
Copy of the first journal of Tolu-e-Islam.

Iqbal was the first patron of Tolu-e-Islam, a historical, political, religious and cultural journal of the Muslims of British India. In 1935, according to his instructions, Syed Nazeer Niazi initiated and edited the journal,[42] named after the famous poem of Iqbal, Tulu'i Islam. Niazi also dedicated the first edition of this journal to Iqbal. For a long time, Iqbal wanted a journal to propagate his ideas and the aims and objectives of the All India Muslim League. The journal played an important role in the Pakistan movement.[37]

Later, the journal was continued[43] by Ghulam Ahmed Pervez, who had already contributed many articles in its early editions.

Literary work

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Persian

Iqbal's poetic works are written primarily in Persian rather than Urdu.Template:Citation needed Among his 12,000 verses of poetry, about 7,000 verses are in Persian.Template:Citation needed In 1915, he published his first collection of poetry, the Asrar-i-Khudi (Secrets of the Self) in Persian. The poems emphasise the spirit and self from a religious, spiritual perspective. Many critics have called this Iqbal's finest poetic work[44] In Asrar-e-Khudi, Iqbal explains his philosophy of "Khudi," or "Self."[8][19] Iqbal's use of the term "Khudi" is synonymous with the word "Rooh" mentioned in the Quran. "Rooh" is that divine spark which is present in every human being, and was present in Adam, for which God ordered all of the angels to prostrate in front of Adam. One has to make a great journey of transformation to realise that divine spirit.[8]

The same concept was used by Farid ud Din Attar in his "Mantaq-ul-Tair". He proves by various means that the whole universe obeys the will of the "Self." Iqbal condemns self-destruction. For him, the aim of life is self-realization and self-knowledge. He charts the stages through which the "Self" has to pass before finally arriving at its point of perfection, enabling the knower of the "Self" to become a vice-regent of God.[8]

In his Rumuz-i-Bekhudi (Hints of Selflessness), Iqbal seeks to prove the Islamic way of life is the best code of conduct for a nation's viability. A person must keep his individual characteristics intact, but once this is achieved he should sacrifice his personal ambitions for the needs of the nation. Man cannot realise the "Self" outside of society. Also in Persian and published in 1917, this group of poems has as its main themes the ideal community,[8] Islamic ethical and social principles, and the relationship between the individual and society. Although he is true throughout to Islam, Iqbal also recognises the positive analogous aspects of other religions. The Rumuz-i-Bekhudi complements the emphasis on the self in the Asrar-e-Khudi and the two collections are often put in the same volume under the title Asrar-i-Rumuz (Hinting Secrets). It is addressed to the world's Muslims.[8]

Iqbal's 1924 publication, the Payam-e-Mashriq (The Message of the East) is closely connected to the West-östlicher Diwan by the German poet Goethe. Goethe bemoans the West having become too materialistic in outlook, and expects the East will provide a message of hope to resuscitate spiritual values. Iqbal styles his work as a reminder to the West of the importance of morality, religion and civilisation by underlining the need for cultivating feeling, ardour and dynamism. He explains that an individual can never aspire to higher dimensions unless he learns of the nature of spirituality.[8] In his first visit to Afghanistan, he presented his book "Payam-e Mashreq" to King Amanullah Khan in which he admired the liberal movements of Afghanistan against the British Empire. In 1933, he was officially invited to Afghanistan to join the meetings regarding the establishment of Kabul University.[30]

The Zabur-e-Ajam (Persian Psalms), published in 1927, includes the poems Gulshan-e-Raz-e-Jadeed (Garden of New Secrets) and Bandagi Nama (Book of Slavery). In Gulshan-e-Raz-e-Jadeed, Iqbal first poses questions, then answers them with the help of ancient and modern insight, showing how it affects and concerns the world of action. Bandagi Nama denounces slavery by attempting to explain the spirit behind the fine arts of enslaved societies. Here as in other books, Iqbal insists on remembering the past, doing well in the present and preparing for the future, while emphasising love, enthusiasm and energy to fulfil the ideal life.[8]

Iqbal's 1932 work, the Javed Nama (Book of Javed) is named after and in a manner addressed to his son, who is featured in the poems. It follows the examples of the works of Ibn Arabi and Dante's The Divine Comedy, through mystical and exaggerated depictions across time. Iqbal depicts himself as Zinda Rud ("A stream full of life") guided by Rumi, "the master," through various heavens and spheres and has the honour of approaching divinity and coming in contact with divine illuminations. In a passage re-living a historical period, Iqbal condemns the Muslim who were instrumental in the defeat and death of Nawab Siraj-ud-Daula of Bengal and Tipu Sultan of Mysore respectively by betraying them for the benefit of the British colonists, and thus delivering their country to the shackles of slavery. At the end, by addressing his son Javid, he speaks to the young people at large, and provides guidance to the "new generation."[8]

His love of the Persian language is evident in his works and poetry. He says in one of his poems:[45]

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Translation: Even though in sweetness Hindi* is sugar(but) speech method in Dari (Persian dialect) is sweeter *

Urdu

Iqbal's Bang-e-Dara (The Call of the Marching Bell), his first collection of Urdu poetry, was published in 1924. It was written in three distinct phases of his life.[8] The poems he wrote up to 1905—the year he left for England—reflect patriotism and imagery of nature, including the Tarana-e-Hind (The song of India),[30] and Tarana-e-Milli (The song of the Community). The second set of poems date from 1905–1908, when Iqbal studied in Europe, and dwell upon the nature of European society, which he emphasised had lost spiritual and religious values. This inspired Iqbal to write poems on the historical and cultural heritage of Islam and the Muslim community, with a global perspective. Iqbal urges the entire Muslim community, addressed as the Ummah, to define personal, social and political existence by the values and teachings of Islam.[8]

Iqbal's works were in Persian for most of his career, but after 1930 his works were mainly in Urdu. His works in this period were often specifically directed at the Muslim masses of India, with an even stronger emphasis on Islam and Muslim spiritual and political reawakening. Published in 1935, the Bal-e-Jibril (Wings of Gabriel) is considered by many critics as his finest Urdu poetry, and was inspired by his visit to Spain, where he visited the monuments and legacy of the kingdom of the Moors. It consists of ghazals, poems, quatrains, epigrams and carries a strong sense of religious passion.[8]

The Pas Cheh Bayed Kard ai Aqwam-e-Sharq (What are we to do, O Nations of the East?) includes the poem Musafir (Traveler). Again, Iqbal depicts Rumi as a character and an exposition of the mysteries of Islamic laws and Sufi perceptions is given. Iqbal laments the dissension and disunity among the Indian Muslims as well as Muslim nations. Musafir is an account of one of Iqbal's journeys to Afghanistan, in which the Pashtun people are counselled to learn the "secret of Islam" and to "build up the self" within themselves.[8] Iqbal's final work was the Armughan-e-Hijaz (The Gift of Hijaz), published posthumously in 1938. The first part contains quatrains in Persian, and the second part contains some poems and epigrams in Urdu. The Persian quatrains convey the impression that the poet is travelling through the Hijaz in his imagination. Profundity of ideas and intensity of passion are the salient features of these short poems.[8]

File:Miqbal4.jpg
Iqbal wearing a bow tie.

Iqbal's vision of mystical experience is clear in one of his Urdu ghazals, which was written in London during his days of studying there. Some verses of that ghazal are:[8]

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English

Iqbal also wrote two books on the topic of The Development of Metaphysics in Persia and The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam and many letters in the English language. In these, he revealed his thoughts regarding Persian ideology and Islamic Sufism – in particular, his beliefs that Islamic Sufism activates the searching soul to a superior perception of life. He also discussed philosophy, God and the meaning of prayer, human spirit and Muslim culture, as well as other political, social and religious problems.[8]

Iqbal was invited to Cambridge to participate in a conference in 1931, where he expressed his views, including that on Separation of church and state to participants which included the students of that university :[8]

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Iqbal known in subcontinent

As Poet of the East

File:Pic iqbal 004.jpg
Allama Iqbal (In the Doctorate of Literature) after the conferment of this Degree by the University of the Punjab in 1933

Iqbal has been recognised and quoted as "Poet of the East" by academics and institutions and media.[13][46][47][48][49][50][51]

The Vice-Chancellor, Quaid-e-Azam University, Dr Masoom Yasinzai described in a seminar as chief guest addressing to a distinguished gathering of educationists and intellectuals, that Iqbal is not a poet of the East only, actually he is a universal poet. Moreover, Iqbal is not restricted to any specific segment of the world community but he is for the entire humanity.[52]

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Iqbal's revolutionary works through his poetry awakened the Muslims of the subcontinent. Iqbal was confident that the Muslims had long been suppressed by the colonial enlargement and growth of the West. In this concept Iqbal is recognised as the "Poet of the East".[47][53][54]

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Urdu world is very familiar Iqbal as the "Poet of the East".[54] Iqbal is also called Muffakir-e-Pakistan, "The Thinker of Pakistan") and Hakeem-ul-Ummat "The Sage of the Ummah"). The Pakistan government officially named him a "national poet".[7]

Iqbal in Iran

In Iran, he is famous as Iqbāl-e Lāhorī. (Iqbal of Lahore) Iqbal's "Asrare-i-Khudi" and "Bal-i-Jibreel" are known in Iran, while many scholars in Iran have recognised the importance of Iqbal's poetry in inspiring and sustaining the Iranian Revolution of 1979.[55][5] During the early phases of the revolutionary movement, it was a common thing to see people gathering in a park or corner to listen to someone reciting Iqbal's blood-warming Persian poetry, that is why people of all ages in Iran today are familiar with at least some of his poetry, notably "Az-zabur-e-Ajam".[56][5]

In his analysis of the Persian poetry of Muhammad Iqbal, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei states that "we have a large number of non-Persian-speaking poets in the history of our literature, but I cannot point out any of them whose poetry possesses the qualities of Iqbal's Persian poetry. Iqbal was not acquainted with Persian idiom, as he spoke Urdu at home and talked to his friends in Urdu or English. He did not know the rules of Persian prose writing."[57]

After the death of Iqbal in 1938, by the early 1950s, Iqbal became known among the intelligentsia of the academic circles of Iran. Iran poet laureate Muhammad Taqi Bahar universalize Iqbal in Iran. He highly praised the work of Iqbal in Persian.

In 1952, the Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadeq, the national hero because of his oil nationalisation policy broadcast a special radio message on Iqbal Day and praised his role in the struggle of the Indian Muslims against British imperialism. At the end of the 1950s, Iranians published the complete works of Persian. In the 1960s, Iqbal thesis on Persian philosophy was translated from English to Persian. Ali Shariati, a Sorbonne-educated sociologist, supported Iqbal as his role model as Iqbal had Rumi. It is the best example of admiration and appreciation of Iran that they gave him the place of honour in the pantheon of the Persian elegy writers.

In 1970, Iran realised Iqbal. Iqbal verses appeared on the banners and poetry recited at meetings of the intellectuals. Iqbal inspired many intellectuals, including famous names, Ali Shariati, Mehdi Bazargan, Sayyed Ali Khamenei and Dr Abdulkarim Soroush.[5]

Key Iranian thinkers and leaders who were influenced by Iqbal's poetry during the rise of the Iranian revolution include Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Ali Shariati, and Abdolkarim Soroush; although much of the revolutionary guard was intimately familiar with numerous verses of Iqbal's body of poetry.[58] In fact, at the inauguration of the First Iqbal Summit in Tehran (1986), The Supreme Leader of the Iranian Revolution, Ayatollah Khamenei stated that in its 'conviction that the Quran and Islam are to be made the basis of all revolutions and movements', Iran was 'exactly following the path that was shown to us by Iqbal'.[58] Ali Shariati, who has been described as a core ideologue for the Iranian Revolution, described Iqbal as a figure who brought a message of "rejuvenation", "awakening" and "power" to the Muslim World.[59]

International influence

Iqbal and the West

File:Iqbal Street in Heidelberg Germany.jpg
Name plate of a street Iqbal-Ufer, Heidelberg, Germany, honoured in the name of Iqbal.[60]

Iqbal's views on the Western world were applauded by men including United States Supreme Court Associate Justice William O. Douglas, who said that Iqbal's beliefs had "universal appeal".[61] In his Soviet biography N. P. Anikoy wrote:

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Others, including Wilfred Cantwell Smith, stated that with Iqbal's anti-capitalist holdings he was 'anti-intellect', because "capitalism fosters intellect".[61] Professor Freeland Abbot objected to Iqbal's views saying that Iqbal's view of the West was based on the role of imperialism and Iqbal was not immersed enough in Western culture to learn about the various benefits of the modern democracies, economic practices and science.[61] Critics of Abbot's viewpoint note that Iqbal was raised and educated in the European way of life, and spent enough time there to grasp the general concepts of Western civilisation.[61]

Bibliography

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Prose books in English

Poetic books in Persian

Poetic books in Urdu

Gallery

See also

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References

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Further reading

External links

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  34. Allama Iqbal’s 73rd death anniversary observed with reverence. Pakistan Today. Retrieved 30 October 2011.
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